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    Flowers for Hitler


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      Flowers for Hitler

      •

      A NOTE ON THE TITLE

      A

      while ago

      this book would

      have been called

      SUNSHINE FOR NAPOLEON,

      and earlier still it

      would have been

      called

      WALLS FOR GENGHIS KHAN

      © COPYRIGHT

      Leonard Cohen, 1964

      ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

      No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publishers, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review to be printed in a magazine or newspaper.

      eISBN: 978-1-55199-499-4

      The Canadian Publishers

      McClelland and Stewart Limited

      25 Hollinger Road, Toronto 16

      DESIGN: F. NEWFELD

      v3.1

      CONTENTS

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Epigraph

      What I’m Doing Here

      The Hearth

      Portrait of the City Hall

      Congratulations

      The Drawer’s Condition on November 28, 1961

      The Suit

      Business as Usual

      Indictment of the Blue Hole

      Nothing I Can Lose

      Police Gazette

      No Partners

      On the Death of an Uncharted Planet

      I Wanted to Be a Doctor

      On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken

      Finally I Called

      Style

      Goebbels Abandons His Novel and Joins the Party

      Why Commands Are Obeyed

      It Uses Us!

      The First Murder

      My Teacher is Dying

      Montreal 1964

      Why Experience Is No Teacher

      For My Old Layton

      The Only Tourist in Havana Turns His Thoughts Homeward

      The Invisible Trouble

      Sick Alone

      Millennium

      Hitler the Brain-Mole

      Death of a Leader

      Alexander Trocchi, Public Junkie, Priez Pour Nous

      Three Good Nights

      To a Man Who Thinks He Is Making an Angel

      On the Sickness of My Love

      Cruel Baby

      For Marianne

      The Failure of a Secular Life

      My Mentors

      Hydra 1960

      Leviathan

      Heirloom

      Promise

      Sky

      Waiting for Marianne

      Why I Happen to Be Free

      The True Desire

      The Way Back

      The Project

      Hydra 1963

      All There Is to Know about Adolph Eichmann

      The New Leader

      How It Happened in the Middle of the Day

      For E.J.P.

      The Glass Dog

      A Migrating Dialogue

      The Bus

      Laundry

      The Rest Is Dross

      How the Winter Gets In

      Propaganda

      Opium and Hitler

      For Anyone Dressed in Marble

      Wheels, Fireclouds

      Folk

      I Had It for a Moment

      Island Bulletin

      Independence

      The House

      Order

      Destiny

      Queen Victoria and Me

      The Pure List and the Commentary

      The New Step (A Ballet-Drama in One Act)

      The Paper

      Nursery Rhyme

      Old Dialogue

      Winter Bulletin

      Why Did You Give My Name to the Police?

      Governments Make Me Lonely

      The Lists

      To the Indian Pilgrims

      The Music Crept By Us

      The Telephone

      Disguises

      Lot

      One of the Nights I Didn’t Kill Myself

      The Big World

      Narcissus

      Cherry Orchards

      Streetcars

      Bullets

      Hitler

      Front Lawn

      Kerensky

      Another Night with Telescope

      FOR MARIANNE

      If from the inside of the Lager, a message could have seeped out to free men, it would have been this: Take care not to suffer in your own homes what is inflicted on us here.

      PRIMO LEVI

      WHAT I’M DOING HERE

      I do not know if the world has lied

      I have lied

      I do not know if the world has conspired against love

      I have conspired against love

      The atmosphere of torture is no comfort

      I have tortured

      Even without the mushroom cloud

      still I would have hated

      Listen

      I would have done the same things

      even if there were no death

      I will not be held like a drunkard

      under the cold tap of facts

      I refuse the universal alibi

      Like an empty telephone booth passed at night

      and remembered

      like mirrors in a movie palace lobby consulted

      only on the way out

      like a nymphomaniac who binds a thousand

      into strange brotherhood

      I wait

      for each one of you to confess

      THE HEARTH

      The day wasn’t exactly my own

      since I checked

      and found it on a public calendar.

      Tripping over many pairs of legs

      as I walked down the park

      I also learned my lust

      was not so rare a masterpiece.

      Buildings actually built

      wars planned with blood and fought

      men who rose to generals

      deserved an honest thought

      as I walked down the park.

      I came back quietly to your house

      which has a place on a street.

      Not a single other house

      disappeared when I came back.

      You said some suffering

      had taught me that.

      I’m slow to learn I began

      to speak of stars and hurricanes.

      Come here little Galileo –

      you undressed my vision –

      it’s happier and easier by far

      or cities wouldn’t be so big.

      Later you worked over lace

      and I numbered many things

      your fingers and all fingers did.

      As if to pay me a sweet

      for my ardour on the rug

      you wondered in the middle of a stitch:

      Now what about those stars and hurricanes?

      PORTRAIT OF THE CITY HALL

      The diamonds of guilt

      The scrolls of guilt

      The pillars of guilt

      The colours of guilt

      The flags of guilt

      The gargoyles of guilt

      The spines of guilt

      Listen, says the mayor, listen to the woodland birds.

      They are singing like men in chains.

      CONGRATULATIONS

      Here we are eating the sacred mushrooms

      out of the Japanese heaven

      eating the flower

      in the sands of Nevada

      Hey Marco Polo

      and you Arthur Rimbaud

      friends of the sailing craft

      examine our time’s adventure

      the jewelled house of Dachau

      Belsen’s drunk fraternity

      Don’t your boats seem

      like floating violins

      playing Jack Benny tunes?


      THE DRAWER’S CONDITION

      ON NOVEMBER 28, 1961

      Is there anything emptier

      than the drawer where

      you used to store your opium?

      How like a blackeyed susan

      blinded into ordinary daisy

      is my pretty kitchen drawer!

      How like a nose sans nostrils

      is my bare wooden drawer!

      How like an eggless basket!

      How like a pool sans tortoise!

      My hand has explored

      my drawer like a rat

      in an experiment of mazes.

      Reader, I may safely say

      there’s not an emptier drawer

      in all of Christendom!

      THE SUIT

      I am locked in a very expensive suit

      old elegant and enduring

      Only my hair has been able to get free

      but someone has been leaving

      their dandruff in it

      Now I will tell you

      all there is to know about optimism

      Each day in hub cap mirror

      in soup reflection

      in other people’s spectacles

      I check my hair

      for an army of alpinists

      for Indian rope trick masters

      for tangled aviators

      for dove and albatross

      for insect suicides

      for abominable snowmen

      I check my hair

      for aerialists of every kind

      Dedicated as an automatic elevator

      I comb my hair for possibilities

      I stick my neck out

      I lean illegally from locomotive windows

      and only for the barber

      do I wear a hat

      BUSINESS AS USUAL

      The gold roof of Parliament covered

      with fingerprints and scratches.

      And here are the elected, hunchbacked

      from climbing on each other’s heads.

      The most precious secret has been leaked:

      There is no Opposition!

      Over-zealous hacks hoist the P.M.

      through the ceiling. He fools

      an entire sled-load of Miss Canada losers

      by acting like a gargoyle.

      Some fool (how did he get in) who

      wants jobs for everyone and says

      so in French is quickly interred

      under a choice piece of the cornice

      and likes it. (STAG PARTY LAUGHTER)

      When are they going to show the dirty movie?

      Don’t cry, Miss Canada,

      it’s not as though the country’s

      in their hands.

      And next year we’re piping in

      Congressional proceedings

      direct from Washington –

      all they’ll have to do

      is make divorces.

      INDICTMENT OF THE BLUE HOLE

      January 28 1962

      You must have heard me tonight

      I mentioned you 800 times

      January 28 1962

      My abandoned narcotics have

      abandoned me

      January 28 1962

      7:30 must have dug its

      pikes into your blue wrist

      January 28 1962

      I shoved the transistor up my ear

      And putting down

      3 loaves of suicide (?)

      2 razorblade pies

      1 De Quincey hairnet

      5-gasfillcd Hampstcad bedsitters (sic)

      a collection of oil

      2 eyelash garottes (sic)

      6 lysol eye foods

      he said with considerable charm and travail:

      Is this all I give?

      One lousy reprieve

      at 2 in the morning?

      This?

      I’d rather have a job.

      NOTHING I CAN LOSE

      When I left my father’s house

      the sun was halfway up,

      my father held it to my chin

      like a buttercup.

      My father was a snake oil man

      a wizard, trickster, liar,

      but this was his best trick,

      we kissed goodbye in fire.

      A mile above Niagara Falls

      a dove gave me the news

      of his death. I didn’t miss a step,

      there’s nothing I can lose.

      Tomorrow I’ll invent a trick

      I do not know tonight,

      the wind, the pole will tell me what

      and the friendly blinding light.

      POLICE GAZETTE

      My grandfather slams the silver goblet down.

      He clears a silence

      in the family talk

      to comment on the wine.

      It’s hot. Jesus is dying of heat.

      There he lies on the wall

      of the sordid courtroom

      trying to get air into his armpits.

      Judge runs a finger

      between neck and collar –

      hands the sentence down.

      Love me this first day of June.

      I’d rather sleep with ashes

      than priestly wisdom.

      Of all the lonely places in the world

      this is best

      where debris is human.

      I kiss the precious ashes

      that fall from fiery flesh.

      On these familiar shapes

      I lay my kisses down.

      Hitler is alive.

      He is fourteen years old.

      He does not shave.

      He wants to be an architect.

      The first star tonight

      insanely high, virgin, calm.

      I have one hour of peace

      before the documented planets

      burn me down.

      NO PARTNERS

      dancer! cut them with your yellow hair

      jawbone of silk slash them down

      trouser slices lapel fragments suit debris

      heaped with choppedup stumblers

      beneath her grapewhite piston feet

      She was hardly leaping, almost stilled by all the power in her, shoulders raised, calling in everything, her elbows pressing it into her stomach. She was a single spindle in the centre of a cobweb, gathering, growing, winding us all into particles of her supreme flesh.

      She barely moved but her body screamed out motion. Her feet barely struck and lifted, almost stilled by all the power in her. Her shoulders were raised, forward, calling in everything, her elbows pressing it into her belly, fingers getting the tidbits, gathering, growing, winding us all into particles of her supreme flesh, And when we’d begone she would be in the

      centre of some vast room

      shimmering enormous at rest

      ON THE DEATH OF AN UNCHARTED PLANET

      Bilesmell in my room

      Too cold to open the window

      Lying on my bed

      Hand over mouth

      Didn’t dare speak

      Out of razorblades

      New pimples

      When suddenly

      I knew it died

      Clean blazing death

      So bright

      So irrelevant

      Puff it went

      Ten times the

      Weight of the world

      Lost to nobody

      New meteors

      New collisions

      What comfort

      At my stomach gnawed

      The divine emptiness

      I ate

      The dirty dishes

      I squeezed my face

      Fat and full

      Free as a bullet

      I did pushups

      On the 11th story

      Clean blazing death

      So bright

      So irrelevant

      Who wouldn’t

      Laugh himself

      Into monstrous health

      Just noticing it

      I WANTED TO BE A DOCTOR

      The famous doctor held up Grandma’s stomach.

      Cancer! Cancer
    ! he cried out.

      The theatre was brought low.

      None of the internes thought about ambition.

      Cancer! They all looked the other way.

      They thought Cancer would leap out

      and get them. They hated to be near.

      This happened in Vilna in the Medical School.

      Nobody could sit still.

      They might be sitting beside Cancer.

      Cancer was present.

      Cancer had been let out of its bottle.

      I was looking in the skylight.

      I wanted to be a doctor.

      All the internes ran outside.

      The famous doctor held on to the stomach.

      He was alone with Cancer.

      Cancer! Cancer! Cancer!

      He didn’t care who heard or didn’t hear.

      It was his 87th Cancer.

      ON HEARING A NAME LONG UNSPOKEN

      Listen to the stories

      men tell of last year

      that sound of other places

      though they happened here

      Listen to a name

      so private it can burn

      hear it said aloud

      and learn and learn

      History is a needle

      for putting men asleep

      anointed with the poison

      of all they want to keep

      Now a name that saved you

      has a foreign taste

      claims a foreign body

      froze in last year’s waste

      And what is living lingers

      while monuments are built

      then yields its final whisper

      to letters raised in gilt

      But cries of stifled ripeness

      whip me to my knees

      I am with the falling snow

      falling in the seas

      I am with the hunters

      hungry and shrewd

      and I am with the hunted

      quick and soft and nude

      I am with the houses

      that wash away in rain

      and leave no teeth of pillars

      to rake them up again

      Let men numb names

      scratch winds that blow

      listen to the stories

      but what you know you know

     


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